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| Peter Williams in As Carriers of Flesh at Schweitzer and David. Gallery Link | 
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| Figures in a Landscape of Stippled Flesh | 
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| Some people eat others for breakfast | 
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| Teeth! with graphite incisions - the wonderful logic of an artist | 
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| Gorgeous detail from a Heather Morgan painting | 
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| Brenda Goodman -the space incarnates the figure | 
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| Shelves and piles of paint | 
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| Peter Williams, portrait on paper | 
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| Brenda Goodman, portrait on paper. | 
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| David Brody in a two-person with Elliot Green at Studio 10. I have been eager to see these Chinese-influenced painters shown together. Brody's paintings swoop through architectural space with sometimes blurred edges, collapsing distinctions between paint and screen, image and space. Gallery Link | 
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| Elliot Green. Landscapes comprised of gestures. | 
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| Brody. Deeply worked spaces with chromatic surprises. One can stay in these paintings a while. | 
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| A simplified Green, almost harking back to American landscape. | 
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| A larger Green that drags and stutters the brush. Thank you, Bushwick. | 
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| From a crazy group show at Anton Kern, Implosion (a celebration of twenty years), a Jonas Wood watercolor. Gallery Link  | 
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| More wonderful juxtapositions. | 
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| Shio Kusaka ceramic pots, T-shirts made of paper pulp by Richard Hughes | 
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| Large, skeletal images with scarred and chipped surfaces. | 
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| At Zwirner 22nd St.: Josef Albers. What a lovely mediation on surface and value! Gallery Link  | 
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| So appreciated the way he swung toward green then back again in the grey scale. Why not augment it? | 
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| Later, at the Rothko show, there would be a blue this brilliant, though not the shrill Maganese seen here. Every colorist has a wild side. | 
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| Josef Albers: resonant, sonorous color, scales of light and dark, sometimes with canvas showing through adding color and tone. | 
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| What a pairing! Rita Ackermann (seen here) and Philip Guston at Hauser & Wirth! Ackermann downstairs, inviting us in with somewhat classical looking abstractions - how is it even possible? Her paintings combined signature motifs with exuberant swipes of color. Gallery Link  | 
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| Upstairs, the wonderful Laughter in the Dark, drawings and some paintings by the great Philip Guston. Gallery Link  | 
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| Scale view for depth and breadth of drawings on view | 
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| Themes in the drawing: Nixon, Key Biscayne (where he often repaired during the Presidency)... | 
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| Landscape, in the most amazing ways - the train runs through many of the drawings | 
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| This wonderful foot... | 
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| rare graphite drawing | 
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| Trip to China | 
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| Double-headed Klan addled golf trip with cars | 
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| Hippies! | 
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| Televised religion! | 
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| Love seeing Guston address Estern forms | 
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| Crossed, upright chopsticks represent the worst of luck~ | 
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| The past, the temptations, the future...our protagonist pauses; | 
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| Thank you to Hauser and Wirth for such a monumental, historically resonant show. | 
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| Yvonne Jacquette at DC Moore. Gallery Link | 
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| Later, the silhouettes flatten, the color fleshes them out, and later still, the color moistens. | 
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| They allude to early Modernists like Charles Sheeler and Stuart Davis. | 
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| At first the dry brushiness yields a patterning that knits the forms together, | 
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| Later, line work takes over. | 
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| Even in a waterscape, line prevails. | 
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| It was very exciting to see the shifts toward the artist's improvised geometries and simplified paint applications. | 
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| Terry Winters at Matthew Marks. Gallery Link | 
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| Strange paintings! Raw canvas, smeared with a knife, then lavish, impasto marks are applied. | 
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| One system, atop another, yields space that can be topographical or diagram. | 
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| Mysterious spae, s if hovering over a large shower stall that suddenly becomes a building. But Winters' emphasis remains on scientific and data systems? | 
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| Detail, actual painting below | 
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| Palettes recalling Matisse | 
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| and Charlene von Heyl | 
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| Rothko's dark paintings at Pace. What a lovely rejoinder to the Josef Albers exhibition at Zwirner 22nd Street! Gallery Link  | 
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| Like Albers, Rothko played with the chromatic brilliance of blues. | 
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| Many of the works in this show were acrylic on paper. The experimentation within his focused oeuvre surprised. It is a beautiful show. Photography not allowed. | 
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| Ending the day with Joan Mitchell at Cheim & Reid. Gallery Link Wonderful to think about in tandem with Terry Winters.  | 
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| Pastels, surprisingly fluid despite the dryness | 
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| One of my favorite things about Joan Mitchell is the way she uses white to edit. What a wonderful day - so many great shows on now.  | 

















































































































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